San Francisco Chronicle

A revolution is under way in America

- By Tucker Carlson

The aftermath of the 2016 election is recognizab­le to any parent who has argued with a child. Everything’s fine until the kid loses interest in what you think. Once it becomes clear the child really doesn’t care about your stupid rules, you lose it and start screaming. The less control you have, the more hysterical you become.

Dying regimes are the same way. They get more repressive as they fade. As their power ebbs, rulers lash out against dissent and disobedien­ce. Deposed Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceaus escubarked orders at his guards as they led him to the firing squad.

Our leaders understood Donald Trump’s election as a direct challenge to their power. They’ve been fretting about his authoritar­ian tendencies ever since. Because they lack selfawaren­ess, they don’t perceive this as projection. They can’t see that they’re actually talking about themselves.

Let’s say you were an authoritar­ian who sought to weaken American democracy. How would you go about doing that? You’d probably start by trying to control what people say and think. If citizens dissented from the mandated orthodoxy, or dared to consider unauthoriz­ed ideas, then you’d hurt them. You’d shame them on social media. You’d shout them down in public. You’d get them fired from their jobs. You’d make sure everyone was afraid to disagree with you.

After that, you’d work to disarm the population: You’d take away their guns. That way, they would be entirely dependent on you for safety, not to mention unable to resist your plans for them. Then, just to make sure you’d quelled all opposition, you’d systematic­ally target any institutio­n that might oppose or put brakes on your power. You’d be especially concerned about churches, the family and independen­t businesses. You’d be sure to undermine and crush those, using laws and relentless propaganda.

If, despite all this, election results still didn’t go your way, you’d use an unelected bureaucrac­y to neuter any leader you hadn’t handpicked yourself. But you’d be shaken by an election like that. You’d resolve never to allow one again. To make sure of that, you’d work tirelessly to replace the old and ungrateful population with a new and more obedient one. That’s what you’d do.

Sound familiar? For all of his many faults, Trump isn’t doing any of that. Our ruling class is.

It’s probably a fruitless exercise on their part. The status quo is over. A revolution is on the way.

Hopefully, it’ll be the kind of low-grade revolution where everybody learns something and nobody gets hurt. But it will be wrenching either way, because revolution­s always are. This used to be a placid country. It’s not anymore, and won’t be for a while. What went wrong? The disaster began when almost everyone in power joined the same team. You used to hear debates between Republican­s and Democrats, liberals and conservati­ves, on issues that mattered to the rest of the country. That’s over. Our public debates are mostly symbolic. They are sideshows designed to divert attention from the fact that those who make the essential decisions, about the economy and the government and war, have reached consensus on the fundamenta­ls. They agree with each other.

They just don’t agree with the population they govern.

Left and right are no longer meaningful categories in America. The rift is between those who benefit from the status quo and those who don’t. That’s rarely acknowledg­ed in public, which is convenient for those who are benefiting. The people in charge are free to pursue policies that are disconnect­ed from the public good but that have, not coincident­ally, made them richer, more powerful and much more self-satisfied.

But not more impressive. Our leaders are fools, unaware that they are captains of a sinking ship. Tucker Carlson is the host of Fox News Channel’s “Tucker Carlson Tonight” and the author of “Ship of Fools: How a Selfish Ruling Class Is Bringing America to the Brink of Revolution,” (Free Press, 2018). He will speak at an Independen­t Institute event in Alameda at 6:30 p.m., Oct. 16, and at a Commonweal­th Club event in San Francisco at noon, Oct. 17.

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